It was Swiss who brought infantry back into offensive warfare for the first time since the Roman legion. This poor mountain people have been forced to fight for the independence against Habsburgs. When most of their soldiers were lightly armed and armored they could resist against Habsburg's feudal army due to the discipline, morale and effective using of mountain terrain.

During XIV centaury the principal Swiss weapon was halberd and the battle tactic consist in the massed shock of halberdiers column charging downhill.

Nevertheless the tactic was continuously developed. They had learned that this same principle would work on level ground if the infantry could maintain their massed formation without gaps and without faltering in the face of a cavalry charge. To exploit this lesson required excellent organization, rigorous training, and iron discipline of a sort unseen since Roman times. Swiss had a variety of formations such as line, wedge, and square which they could adopt in prompt, systematic, orderly fashion. For the most part, however, they marched and fought in heavy columns, with a frontage rarely exceeding 30 men, but often 50 to 100 men deep.

Whenever possible, the Swiss marched directly and rapidly into combat from march column. There was no deploying, no delay of any sort in going through the formality of establishing a battle line. They usually fought in 3 columns, echeloned to the left or right rear. If the countryside would permit, the individual columns would march.

In addition to the basic halberdiers, Swiss formations included a few crossbowmen (later also handgunners) as skirmishers.

The defeat by Milanese at Arbedo (1422) forced Swiss to reconsider the tactical effectives of halberd as principal weapon and shortly after battle the instructions were given to increase the number of pikes in the contingents. The introduction of pike hasn’t eliminated the halberds. The halberdiers have been located in the interior files of the column and their principal task was to cut down individual horsemen in a melee, when the pikemen had stopped or repulsed a cavalry charge.

The Swiss have adopted the phalanx system of deploying their pikemen. The first four ranks of pikemen would level their weapons to create the impenetrable wall while the remaining ranks would hold their weapon upright, ready to fill the gaps.

The first test of test of new formation was battle of St. Jacob (1444) were French army of 40,000 soldiers have attacked small reconnaissance Swiss force (1500 soldiers). In the ensuing battle, the Swiss force was annihilated, but they killed approximately 3000 French attackers. The determination and efficiency of Swiss infantry so discouraged French that they withdrew...

Typical composition of Swiss army of this age could be found on the Zurich roll from 1443:

Crossbowmens - 473

Handgunners - 61

Pikemens - 635

Halberiers&Axemens – 1591

The Swiss scorned cannon, and during the 15th century did not fully understand the vulnerability of their own massed columns to effective artillery fire -mainly because up to that time there had been no real field artillery. Charles the Bold of Burgundy recognized this Swiss vulnerability to cannon and small-arms fire, but his own rashness prevented him from exploiting his relatively advanced tactical ideas.

No other infantry in Europe could stand up to the Swiss, and by the end of the century their moral as well as tactical ascendancy was complete. Although they hired themselves out as mercenaries indiscriminately, more often than not they provided the principal infantry component of the French armies of the late 15th century.

Maximilian of Habsburg, plagued by this as much as by his wars with Switzerland, tried to offset the Swiss infantry advantages by creating a German counterpart: the landsknechts. Organized, trained, and equipped just like their model, the landsknecht mercenaries were soon nearly as sought after as the Swiss themselves. Strangely, however, whenever Swiss and landsknechts were pitted against each other, although the struggle was always fierce and bloody, the Swiss were invariably victorious. They seem to have been even more ferocious and bloodthirsty against their German imitators than against any other foe.

Why did an amalgamation of German French and Italians band together to fight that hapsburgs anyway?

In fact there were 3 german cantons (districts) which have formed the
first alliance : the Schwyz, Uri and Unterwalden at 1291.. the next
cantons have joined the federation later. The main reason were the
taxes required by habsburgians administration..

The Dutch and the Flemings (as well as the Scots) adopted the pike sooner than did the Swiss but they did not actually develop a way to use it offensively. Therefore, we can say that offensive pike warfare in Middle Age Europe began with the Swiss and the Landsknechts.

This poor mountain people have been forced to fight for the independence against Habsburgs.

first of all, the swis peasantry was not poor, in fact the peasants of Swabia were the richest in the whole HRE, possibly in whole Europe. Swabia itself is of corse not a rich province, but the peasantry was, that's why there has been the peasantwar and other minor uprisings in that area early in the 16th century. second, the Swiss were in fact self governing since the Zähringer dynasty died out in the early 13th century, the Swiss did therefore not fight for independence, they only wanted to prevent immediate Habsburg dominance after they attempted to connect their original holdings in northern Switzerland with the holdings in Austria. Swiss were at no point opressed.

The Swiss have adopted the phalanx system of deploying their pikemen. The first four ranks of pikemen would level their weapons to create the impenetrable wall while the remaining ranks would hold their weapon upright, ready to fill the gaps.

but it was not the same as the macedonian phalanx of ancient times, the Swiss Gewalthaufen had an caree-like defensive formation that was not known in ancient Greece, similarities are therefore conincidental.

and I wasn't the case that infantry as been reintroduced, it was rather the lack of a cavalry-riding nobility that forced them to modify agricultural tools to weapons, like the Hussite flail for example...

and Swiss or German swere not more bloodthirsty thatn everyone else is in a bloodthirsty world...

irst
of all, the swis peasantry was not poor, in fact the peasants of Swabia
were the richest in the whole HRE, possibly in whole Europe. Swabia
itself is of corse not a rich province, but the peasantry was, that's
why there has been the peasantwar and other minor uprisings in that
area early in the 16th century.

Well, I have really no knowledge about the economical position of Swiss peasantry..but what have the Swabia here to do ?

second,
the Swiss were in fact self governing since the Zähringer dynasty died
out in the early 13th century, the Swiss did therefore not fight for
independence, they only wanted to prevent immediate Habsburg dominance
after they attempted to connect their original holdings in northern
Switzerland with the holdings in Austria. Swiss were at no point
opressed.

Sorry Temujin but I don't see the contradictions here..Habsburgs
attempt to subordinate the "Forest Cantons", thus Swiss
have fight for independence despite the fact they were more or less
independent before..

but
it was not the same as the macedonian phalanx of ancient times, the
Swiss Gewalthaufen had an caree-like defensive formation that was not
known in ancient Greece, similarities are therefore conincidental.

I have never claim that it was identical with Macedonian phalanx, but
similarities were great however. As for the carre-like defensive
formation look for the last stage of battle of Magnesia where the
Seleukos phalanx have formed such carre (or just look the expamles of
Macedonian formations in the "Armies of Ancient World " by John Warry )

and Swiss or German swere not more bloodthirsty thatn everyone else is in a bloodthirsty world...

I don't mean Swiss and Germans but Swiss vs Landknechts which were in fact the rivals as a mercenaries...

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